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Sales, Adam C.; Pane, John F. – International Educational Data Mining Society, 2020
The design of the Cognitive Tutor Algebra I (CTA1) intelligent tutoring system assumes that students work through sections of material following a pre-specified order, and only move on from one section to the next after mastering the first section's skills. However, the software gives teachers the flexibility to override that structure, by…
Descriptors: Student Placement, Intelligent Tutoring Systems, Algebra, Mathematics Instruction
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Rickles, Jordan; Yang, Rui; Clements, Peggy; de los Reyes, Iliana Brodziak; Heppen, Jessica – Society for Research on Educational Effectiveness, 2020
Use of online credit recovery is a growing trend across the country, with the hope that expanding credit recovery options through online courses will help students get back on track toward graduation (e.g., Atkins, Brown, & Hammond, 2007; Gemin, Pape, Vashaw, & Watson, 2015). But expanded use of online credit recovery for high school…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Required Courses, Credits, High School Students
Bennie W. Baker – ProQuest LLC, 2020
This case study investigated the phenomenon of the black white test score gap by seeking to determine if there was a difference in the academic performance of African American students and their White peers. The determination of student academic performance was made using scores from second semester Algebra II classes at two high schools in the…
Descriptors: African American Students, Achievement Gap, High School Students, Algebra
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Tim Erickson – Mathematics Teacher: Learning and Teaching PK-12, 2020
Many teachers of intermediate algebra or precalculus use an activity where balls are dropped from known heights and the heights of the bounces are recorded. The "bounce height" will be a roughly constant fraction of the "drop height." Then one can plot each bounce height against its bounce number, an exponential function can…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Algebra, Calculus, Mathematical Concepts
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Jason Knight Belnap; Amy Parrott – Mathematics Teacher: Learning and Teaching PK-12, 2020
This article discusses how technology, in conjunction with carefully designed tasks and orchestrated discussions, has the potential to both reveal students' mathematical practices and to provide opportunities to shape those practices. Four specific mathematical practices that tend to be associated with problem-solving situations are examined: (1)…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Problem Solving, Models
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Battey, Dan; Amman, Kristen; Leyva, Luis A.; Hyland, Nora; McMichael, Emily Wolf – Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 2022
Precalculus and calculus are considered gatekeeper courses because of their academic challenge and status as requirements for STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) and non-STEM majors alike. Despite college mathematics often being seen as a neutral space, the field has identified ways that expectations, interactions, and…
Descriptors: Racial Differences, Gender Differences, Mathematics Education, Algebra
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Sibgatullin, Iskander R.; Korzhuev, Andrey V.; Khairullina, Elmira R.; Sadykova, Albina R.; Baturina, Roza V.; Chauzova, Vera – EURASIA Journal of Mathematics, Science and Technology Education, 2022
Algebraic thinking is a method of solving math problems that stresses the significance of general connections. Excellent algebraic thinking necessitates strong symbolization and generalization ability. Students aged 7 to 15 are at the Piaget thinking stage's formal operational stage. Teachers, especially those working with secondary school…
Descriptors: Algebra, Thinking Skills, Mathematics Skills, Problem Solving
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Dorce, Carlos – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2022
For quite some time, research on the use of the History of Mathematics in the classroom has confirmed a lot of academic benefits for students. However, the History of Mathematics can also be used as an inclusion tool in classrooms where there are foreign students because it allows working with the specific contexts of other cultures. This article…
Descriptors: Social Integration, Units of Study, Mathematics Instruction, Educational Benefits
Elizabeth O'Shea Zeiss – ProQuest LLC, 2022
The purpose of this quantitative, quasi-experimental study was to determine if, and to what extent, technology-enhanced problem-based formative assessment instruction would have an impact on college students' algebra learning and development of critical thinking skills, when compared to traditional classroom instruction in a first-year college…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Algebra, Mathematics Achievement, Achievement Gains
Walter L. Leite; Huan Kuang; Zeyuan Jing; Wanli Xing; Catherine Cavanaugh; A. Corinne Huggins-Manley – Grantee Submission, 2022
The current study examines both student self-regulated learning (SRL) and teacher orchestration in a virtual learning environment (VLE), with respect to student achievement. The study used SRL indicators derived from the log data on how students used the VLE system, survey data on how teachers made use of the VLE for Algebra instruction, as well…
Descriptors: Independent Study, Teacher Role, Student Role, Educational Technology
Jessica L. Smith – ProQuest LLC, 2022
There have been recent pushes for more active learning in mathematics classrooms, especially at the undergraduate level. To incorporate more active learning, there is a need for tasks that explicitly support this type of instruction, attention to student reasoning and whose ideas are publicly acknowledged, and awareness of differences in students'…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Active Learning, Mathematical Logic, Algebra
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Lundberg, Anna. L. V.; Kilhamn, Cecilia – International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education, 2018
This article reports on an analysis of the process in which "knowledge to be taught" was transposed into "knowledge actually taught," concerning a task including proportional relationships in an algebra setting in a grade 6 classroom. We identified affordances and constraints of the task by describing the mathematical…
Descriptors: Mathematical Concepts, Algebra, Mathematics Instruction, Grade 6
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Roepke, Tena L. – Australian Senior Mathematics Journal, 2018
Discovery learning has long been a part of mathematics teaching in the elementary and middle grades. Since the 1960s and 1970s, based on the work of Jean Piaget, Jerome Bruner, and others, helping students 'discover' or 'construct' their own understandings of mathematical concepts through well-designed activities facilitated by a competent teacher…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts, Calculus, Concept Formation
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Levin, Mariana – Cognition and Instruction, 2018
This article elaborates a new direction for studying the construction of novel strategies that enables researchers to model the conceptual underpinnings of students' observable strategic actions during episodes of mathematical problem solving. The nature of the relationship between conceptual and procedural knowledge has been persistently debated…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Problem Solving, Algebra, Word Problems (Mathematics)
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Kontorovich, Igor' – International Journal of Research in Undergraduate Mathematics Education, 2018
This study is concerned with the reasoning that undergraduates apply when deciding whether a prompt is an example or non-example of the subspace concept. A qualitative analysis of written responses of 438 students revealed five unconventional tacit models that govern their reasoning. The models account for whether a prompt is a subset of a vector…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Algebra, Geometric Concepts, Mathematical Formulas
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